To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Chicago examiner saturday october 9 1909 18 pages j vol vii no 251 a m price one cent gs_s**Â«s hearst accepts if the opponents to tammany can be united whether he runs or not he will support fusion ticket except bannard citizens ought to win independents and fusionists should combine and assure tammany's defeat new york oct b william r hearst sent the following letter to-night to the committee representing the cooper union mass meeting of wednesday night my friends l have decided to accede to your request and to enter this cam paign against tammany hall upon one condition that condition is that the op position to tammany hall shall be united and not divided if we were to place a straight ticket in the field and the fusion party shall have its ticket in the field and tammany hall shall have its ticket in the field then the opposition to tammany hall would be di vided and tammany's disgraceful ticket might be fastened like a cancerous growth upon the body politic for another year i know that my personal chances of election would be better on a straight in dependent ticket but i am not consider ing merely my personal chances of elec tion what could i accomplish as mayor surrounded by a tammany hall adminis tration and hampered in every move by a tammany board of estimate what could any man accomplish under such conditions i have been able as a private citizen to secure 80-cent gas for the people of this city and to obtain for them a reasonable number of other benefits i certainly would not desire to occupy the office of mayor and to assume its arduous duties except for the opportunities that would be afforded me in that powerful position to secure many more such substantial ad vantages for the citizens i would not consent to be mayor unless i could carry with me from that office a record of achievement of which i would be proud and of which yon would be proud and i will not consent to run for mayor except under conditions which will make that record of achievement possible cannot support bannard the fusion ticket lately nominated be hind mr bannard and in opposition to tammany hall is composed mainly of gen tlemen who are at once honest inde pendent and progressive these gentlemen have for the most part freely and fearlessly expressed their independent views and de clared their progressive opinions i make exception of mr bannard because he has to date expressed nothing and declared nothing either from unwillingness to talk or from inability to think i cannot sup port mr bannard but i can and will whether i om a candidate or not support the rest of the fusion ticket nominated in opposition to tammany hall when the independence league commit tee withdrew from the fusion conference it declared that it still stood ready to sup port a frank and honest expression of pro gressive principles and candidates irrespec tive cf party who can be depended upon and who will be in a position to carry out these principles this is your opportunity to substantiate that declaration nominate me if you desire with the greater part of that fusion ticket behind me and i will run the candidates nominated on the fu lion ticket are worthy of support the licket is already in the field if we nom inate another ticket both tickets may be ateated if we nominate the fusion ticket r________y will be defeated and if tam ny li defeated the citizens win no mat ter whether mr gaynor is elected or mr bannard is elected or i am elected if i am elected i shall go into office with an honest progressive administration surrounding me ready to assist in carrying out a beneficial programme if mr ban nard is elected he will be surrouuded by an administration which will compel him to take some progressive action and if judge gaynor is elected you can do him no greater service than forcibly to deprive him of the disreputables of tammany hall whom he has chosen for his associates and to substitute an honest and intelligent body of men ready to aid him in carrying out his progressive ideas if he still has any gaynor has no individuality my friends in conclusion i wish to say that while i consider the election of the fusion ticket of great importance i am not entering this campaign for that purpose alone i am entering this campaign to represent the large body of citizens inde pendent in action and progressive in thought who have no representation what ever iu either of the mayoralty candidates already named before judge gaynor's letter of accept ance i had hoped that he would represent that element of the citizenship but his letter made clear to all of us that to se cure the tammany nomination he had sac rificed not only his liberty of action but his freedom of thought when i spoke before your county com mittee i said we will know whether or not we are for judge gaynor when we know for what ue stands and with whom he stands in the light of judge gaynor's letter of acceptance wc fi that he is willing dr cook smiles his way to the pole of Chicago hearts 6,000 cheer at coliseum lecture hail him as discoverer explorer is rescued from the congress hotel guests who nearly mob him finds talking strenuous arctic hero dodges peary controversy but slaps once at polar trust when dr frederick a cook discoverer of the north pole arrived in Chicago last evening a crowd of less than 200 persons was gathered at the dearborn station t wejeome the man of whom tha whole world has made a hero the exact honr of his arrival 7 p m was not known until late ln the day and it was not a convenient time for a demonstration dr cook was in Chicago for five hours leaving shortly after his lecture at the coliseum for cincinnati where he will speak this evening ! six thousand persons gave the explorer a rousing welcome at the coliseum and frequent applause interrupted his story of his conquest of the pole the crowd at the station made np in enthusiasm what it lacked in numbers and but for two flies of policemen who kept the passage clear the explorer would have been captured by the mob as it was the onlookers caught a glimpse of a sntwl rather travel-stained man with a smile which might aspire to rivalry with the smile of president Taft it was a tropical smile which left no trace of the polar squint he smiled his way into the hearts of the crowd at the station smiled at the throngs which cheered him ln the streets and with still more smiles he charmed his big audience at the coli i seum calls speaking strenuous rushing about the country making speeches day and night is almost as stren uous as making a dash to the pole said dr cook to the reporters who boarded his train at englewood i am suffering from a slight cold as the consequence the explorer was seated in the private car of f a delano president of the wabash railroad of short muscular build bronzed complexion kindly gray eyes firm mouth and chin and ever-ready smile dr cook looked the man who was not only inured to hardship but accustomed to laughing in its face mrs cook sat opposite him and on a table by his side was an open box of bon bous the records and observations which will prove my claim to discovery of the north tole will be submitted to the university of copenhagen before the end of the year he said when the university has passed upon them i shall submit duplicate copies simultaneously to all the geographical so cieties of the world it will doubtless take f_e~\iniversl!y at least a month to examine my records my eskimo guides will be brought here next summer tells about the pole what did the north pole look like queried an interviewer just a field of floating ice with no land or life of any sort in sight replied dr cook at times the ice appeared purple the tint depending on the position of the sun at dearborn station the train was board ed by mr dixon mr day and the other members of the reception committee in cluding j h batten a r gates charles j o'connor and h e otte no seienti'its or representatives of geograph ical societies appeared the committee es corted dr cook to an automobile where dr cook bowed in acknowledgment of the applause of the crowd as he boarded the automobile florence walton and blanche west of the old town com pany presented him with an engraved scroll bearing the signatures of the lead j ing theatrical people now playing here i the lobby of the congress hotel was filled with men and women when the explorer arrived and shouts of here's dr cook : _ . â€” , discoverer of the xorth pole r eady to leave the depot upon his arrival in Chicago and some of the welcoming citizens cartoonist igoe's idea of cook's appearance as a lecturer is given oelow in the picture reading from left to right are shown two actresses dr frederick a cook clyde l day mrs cook george w dixon and walter lonsdale dr murphy button stahts 25,000 suit woman cured by operation sues because contrivance meant to stay did stay for correctly performing an abdominal operation dr d n eisendrath is asked to pay 25,000 to his patient mrs vendela olson 1 ' it all hinges on a murphy sutton the little appliance which was invented by dr john b murphy of Chicago and is recognized by all authorities to have revo lutionized abdominal surgery is causing mrs olson and her lawyer l h saltiel more worry thau stitching the real article on a double row directoire would cause the attorney alone the button was used tn an operation on mrs olson and not removed just how she discovered that the button was not removed the flies in the damage suit which was entered in the superior court yesterday do not reveal however stay the button did and dr eisendrath admits it further he admits compound ing his offense by allowing the appliance to stay even after a second operation which became necessary button meant to stay perhaps mrs olson's nurse wished to while the weary hours of convalescence away with pleasant conversation so in formed her that dr eisendrath had not removed the button perhaps the doctor himself had told mrs olson in a burst of confidence that he had left the appliance * anyhow mrs olson still has the button and wants 23,000 for retaining possession the oniy argument against mrs olson's claim for 25,000 however is the asser tion by dr murphy himself and every other surgeon whoever did use the murphy but ton that it was meant to stay in fact it would be impossible to remove lhe but ton after it had been used to join two parts of a severed intestine this insignificant fact was overlooked by mrs olson and her attorney i\_e the suit was brought discovery to bring smiles the murphy button consists of two silver bulbs on a silver tube of about half an inch in diameter the ends of the severed intestine are drawn over the bulbs stitched together and the bulbs snapped together by a spring holding the stitched edges in place until complete healing of the wound takes place nature takes care of the but ton after the wonud is healed mrs olson's discovery that the wicked button is still with her will produce noth ing more than a smile among the profes sion according to dr eisendrath dr murphy in the meantime will go on cheerfully using his appliance wherever necessary oblivious to mrs olson's in dignation or mr saltiel's opinion of dr eisendrath's surgery lewis denies knox story Chicago _ n.vy.r in washington on legal business he says washington d c oct s colonel j hamilton lewis who arrived here to night from new york says that if secre tary knox as reported telegraphed hiin at Chicago to come to washington he did uot get the telegram as he left Chicago sev eral days ago speaking of the report that secretary knox wants to see him colonel lewis said that he is not informed as to that statement but that if knox wants to see him it is probably about some phase of the report which lewis made to the department after his tour of japan and east generally it is probable colonel lewis will call at the state depart ment it was legal business that called colonel lewis to new york and washing ton he says the uuÂ£d states supreme court will open on m____ly __â– _____ f new air marvel can rise to any height san francisco cal oct 8.-a flying ; machine that lifts itself vertically without any forward propulsion is the claim made for a new marvel of the air which will be tested ln the near future inventor w j english of gather station near fruitvale and his father peter english have spent a year in the construction of the machine they declare their invention ls the solu tion of the helicopter problem which has puzzled aeronauts in this country and france the machine which incorporates the helicopter principle at the starting of the motor and by means of its propellers will rise gracefully in the air to almost any al titude the englishes say by diverting the propellers from their horizontal or lifting position twenty-eight degrees a driving pow er of seventy-five miles an hour is attained the less number of degrees the propellers are diverted the more slowly the helicopter ls driven ahead the helicopter weighs 525 pounds and is built of steel tubing its wheel base is eight feet by four feet it carries a motor of seventy five horse power weighing mo pounds the helicopter has an estimated lifting capacity of over 1.000 pounds j.'w m'kinnon aids morse i lii.-.-i_oaii buys in steamship line for fremied financier bostox oct b by a foreclosure sale in boston the plan for reorganization of the metropolitan steamship company is prac tically assured and charles yv morse re mains in control of the line for 2,500,000 which is 59.000 less than the mortgage held by the american trust company the prop erty was bought in the interest of the re organization there was no competition president fessenden of the american trust company acted as auctioneer john vv mckinnon of Chicago made the only bid of j-.'.500.000 he charles w morse and george e shaw are the reorganization managers they will forr a corporation anoecarry out the plan â– ireland to get home rule if liberals win election by churchill jsame form of government as that of south africa is promised special cable to the examiner london oet b lf the liberal party wins the impending general election there is the strongest probability of ireland being granted home rule that a definite agreement to that effect has been con cluded between the leaders of the liberal and irish parties was evident from to-day's speeches winston churchill speaking at the na tional liberal club declared that the gov ernment would effect a national settle ment with ireland tlie same as we have made with south africa mr birrell speaking at bristol with sig nificant concurrence said the time must come when irish questions shall be relegated to ireland where they can be understood the outcome of the fight which the lib erals are waging against the lords on the budget is most important so far as ire land is concerned if the liberals win the truth of john redmond's assertion that the last obstacle to home rule has been removed will undoubtedly be shown as with the mandate of the people behind them the re-elected liberal party could jam through a home ruh_j|iu which ihe lords dare not vcy^____k mm _â– __ ___ statistics of the two great games cubs-sox pirates-tigers attendance 16,762 attendance 29,743 total receipts 11,683.75 total receipts 40,271.50 players'share 6,309.22 players share 21,746.61 each club's share 2,103.08 each club 7,248.87 national commission 1,168.37 national commission 4,027.15 cubs ano pirate victors 46,000 view openings of decisive baseball series by frank b mcquiston by hugh s fullerton overall well backed by west siders takes the great walsh into camp 4 to 0 chance's men clinching game in first inning on loose fielding of old foes peaceful pittsburg is kept awake by howling fans who parade in honor of the 4 to 1 defeat of detroit in the first world's championship contest the revelers block street car traffic pittsburg pa oct 8 one thousand joy-mad pittsburg ball bugs chanting through the corridors of the colonial annex hotel to-night was one of the features of an evening of terror to law-abiding citizens of pittsburg and this was the song they sang oh how do you like our wagner who is not unknown to fame maybe he hasn't ty cobb's wings but he gets there just the same when the mob would stop to take breath there could be heard stealing down tiÂ»c elevator shaft the pitiful whine of the tiger yes pittsburg met the detroit tiger l'or the world's baseball championship to-day and that tigers is pittsburg's over night at least incidentally hans wagner is a few laps ahead of ty cobb to-night in the fame marathon the score of the first battle for the world's champion ship was pittsburg 4 detroit 1 sit 3:55 p in when 29,743 fans poured out of forbes field it looked like a footrace from a deaf and dumb congress they had no more voice than so many rabbits they had lost their talk inside the grounds how ever later on their voices came back apparently one hundredfold and that's why other people in pittsburg are not sleeping to-night parades block street cars the city is mad street car traffic jwas interfered with downtown to-night ' by impromptu parades each of which i sooner or later brought up in front i of the colonial annex where the un | fortunate jennings and his band of ; american league champions have j sought refuge it is not aione that the champion jpittsburgs beat detroit to-day in the 1 opening round of the annual fight for the world's championship that causes the mad joy in pittsburg to-night but ! it is what the future holds or what itbe local fans think the future holds for did not jennings to-day present his strongest front with the prac tically unbeatable mullin in the box and did not pittsburg in opposition present adams admittedly its weakest pitcher and yet after one bad inning adams toyed with the champion tigers they could do noth ing with him on the other hand the further the pirates went with mullin the closer they got to him bet 1 to 2 pirates take 4 straight betting in pittsburg to-night is 2 to 1 on pittsburg for the champion ship and 1 to 2 that detroit does not win a game if to-day's play by the two teams may be used as a criterion then detroit never should win any game from pittsburg the fun began with the break of day when almost 3,000 persons were found huddled in the fog outside the ticket windows at forbes field some of them had been there more than twelve hours while almost all had been there more than six hours wait ing for the windows to open so they might pay 50 cents for the privilege of sitting on a hard seat ins'.ae the field to see pittsburg and detroit fight by 9 o'clock the crowd outside the windows had increased to 5,000 and then came the police 300 strong to o 1 ne batted ball one burst ol speed a quick hurried throw a frantic stab by a stiff-backed baseman and the first game ol the Chicago championsmp series had been thrown away by the white sox almost before it started and victory forced upon the willing even eager cubs that one play the first of a hard fought but hopeless game yielded two runs for the 1909 world's champions and enabled them to win without much effort 4 to 0 the four represents not the batting strength of the ct^ta against walsh but more the weak qe fense offered by tiie white sox to the fast and clever nttacks of their foe men and the big naught achieved by the white sox represents the effec tiveness of big orvie overall who pitching magnificently and withou waver or wabble curved the south siders into a state of aelpless sub mission only once did iliey really l threaten to score and that time a pitch out wrecked the sox hit and run plan sawed down a runner at thirrl and enabled overall to blank the foe 16.672 see-civil war start the opening of the intersectional struggle came under ideal circum stances and never was there a more perfect day a prettier crowd or more delightful surroundings for a ball game in a way however the crowd was disappointing for only 16,672 came filling th â€¢ reserved seats pact ing portions Â«>â€¢:,. , , md leavinij great gaps on dior scheme of humanity fart â€¢â– ns over flowed however _^ ' can ity surrounded the \ it was a diviiied . . geysers of applause b j the throng in snots r"-i tnv * well wild outburst â– ile wals mowing down the cubs with big fast breaking side arm spi all but trostly it was a solid volume of w.'si side rooting for the cubs were intreur92fe at home playing before the c.a&h up west siders while the north siofl the cribs and the uitlanders looked on impartially roar of applause greets cub 1 !.. there was a terrific roar from the crowd already assembled when short ly after 1 o'clock chance led his vet eran warriors down the field to start the campaign to recover the cham pionship of Chicago which was lost to the sox three years ago it was a grim and battle-scarred aggregation quiet and businesslike and they start ed practicing as if post-season serie were all in the day's work a few moments later there was â– roar from the crowd struggling arounob the entrances as sullivan and hl blue-garbed team arrived and a mo i ment later the men who had foughi against hope all through the american league season trotted down the field their partisans giving them a wild greeting and the shrill war yelp of th south side make-a-hit make-a-hiiw make-a-hit went up from all pares ofl the field 1 the cubs batted and as the sol * came on for their batting practice th south side cry rose again defying th west side for threejarters of an hour while hit a crowd stiu^bcinbled and massed tr - l f_fl continued en 3d page 1st column continued on 4th page 2nd column t sntinued kon 4th page 3rd column jp weather forecast j jy>a Chicago and vicinity â€” partly f j jt 1 y cloudy saturday and sunday with fcj \ â– *Â« probably showers cooler moderate j-/3 " mj variable winds ji-ji fl yes read the seore fll '& but don't overlook r \ l the want ads jg

Chicago examiner saturday october 9 1909 18 pages j vol vii no 251 a m price one cent gs_s**Â«s hearst accepts if the opponents to tammany can be united whether he runs or not he will support fusion ticket except bannard citizens ought to win independents and fusionists should combine and assure tammany's defeat new york oct b william r hearst sent the following letter to-night to the committee representing the cooper union mass meeting of wednesday night my friends l have decided to accede to your request and to enter this cam paign against tammany hall upon one condition that condition is that the op position to tammany hall shall be united and not divided if we were to place a straight ticket in the field and the fusion party shall have its ticket in the field and tammany hall shall have its ticket in the field then the opposition to tammany hall would be di vided and tammany's disgraceful ticket might be fastened like a cancerous growth upon the body politic for another year i know that my personal chances of election would be better on a straight in dependent ticket but i am not consider ing merely my personal chances of elec tion what could i accomplish as mayor surrounded by a tammany hall adminis tration and hampered in every move by a tammany board of estimate what could any man accomplish under such conditions i have been able as a private citizen to secure 80-cent gas for the people of this city and to obtain for them a reasonable number of other benefits i certainly would not desire to occupy the office of mayor and to assume its arduous duties except for the opportunities that would be afforded me in that powerful position to secure many more such substantial ad vantages for the citizens i would not consent to be mayor unless i could carry with me from that office a record of achievement of which i would be proud and of which yon would be proud and i will not consent to run for mayor except under conditions which will make that record of achievement possible cannot support bannard the fusion ticket lately nominated be hind mr bannard and in opposition to tammany hall is composed mainly of gen tlemen who are at once honest inde pendent and progressive these gentlemen have for the most part freely and fearlessly expressed their independent views and de clared their progressive opinions i make exception of mr bannard because he has to date expressed nothing and declared nothing either from unwillingness to talk or from inability to think i cannot sup port mr bannard but i can and will whether i om a candidate or not support the rest of the fusion ticket nominated in opposition to tammany hall when the independence league commit tee withdrew from the fusion conference it declared that it still stood ready to sup port a frank and honest expression of pro gressive principles and candidates irrespec tive cf party who can be depended upon and who will be in a position to carry out these principles this is your opportunity to substantiate that declaration nominate me if you desire with the greater part of that fusion ticket behind me and i will run the candidates nominated on the fu lion ticket are worthy of support the licket is already in the field if we nom inate another ticket both tickets may be ateated if we nominate the fusion ticket r________y will be defeated and if tam ny li defeated the citizens win no mat ter whether mr gaynor is elected or mr bannard is elected or i am elected if i am elected i shall go into office with an honest progressive administration surrounding me ready to assist in carrying out a beneficial programme if mr ban nard is elected he will be surrouuded by an administration which will compel him to take some progressive action and if judge gaynor is elected you can do him no greater service than forcibly to deprive him of the disreputables of tammany hall whom he has chosen for his associates and to substitute an honest and intelligent body of men ready to aid him in carrying out his progressive ideas if he still has any gaynor has no individuality my friends in conclusion i wish to say that while i consider the election of the fusion ticket of great importance i am not entering this campaign for that purpose alone i am entering this campaign to represent the large body of citizens inde pendent in action and progressive in thought who have no representation what ever iu either of the mayoralty candidates already named before judge gaynor's letter of accept ance i had hoped that he would represent that element of the citizenship but his letter made clear to all of us that to se cure the tammany nomination he had sac rificed not only his liberty of action but his freedom of thought when i spoke before your county com mittee i said we will know whether or not we are for judge gaynor when we know for what ue stands and with whom he stands in the light of judge gaynor's letter of acceptance wc fi that he is willing dr cook smiles his way to the pole of Chicago hearts 6,000 cheer at coliseum lecture hail him as discoverer explorer is rescued from the congress hotel guests who nearly mob him finds talking strenuous arctic hero dodges peary controversy but slaps once at polar trust when dr frederick a cook discoverer of the north pole arrived in Chicago last evening a crowd of less than 200 persons was gathered at the dearborn station t wejeome the man of whom tha whole world has made a hero the exact honr of his arrival 7 p m was not known until late ln the day and it was not a convenient time for a demonstration dr cook was in Chicago for five hours leaving shortly after his lecture at the coliseum for cincinnati where he will speak this evening ! six thousand persons gave the explorer a rousing welcome at the coliseum and frequent applause interrupted his story of his conquest of the pole the crowd at the station made np in enthusiasm what it lacked in numbers and but for two flies of policemen who kept the passage clear the explorer would have been captured by the mob as it was the onlookers caught a glimpse of a sntwl rather travel-stained man with a smile which might aspire to rivalry with the smile of president Taft it was a tropical smile which left no trace of the polar squint he smiled his way into the hearts of the crowd at the station smiled at the throngs which cheered him ln the streets and with still more smiles he charmed his big audience at the coli i seum calls speaking strenuous rushing about the country making speeches day and night is almost as stren uous as making a dash to the pole said dr cook to the reporters who boarded his train at englewood i am suffering from a slight cold as the consequence the explorer was seated in the private car of f a delano president of the wabash railroad of short muscular build bronzed complexion kindly gray eyes firm mouth and chin and ever-ready smile dr cook looked the man who was not only inured to hardship but accustomed to laughing in its face mrs cook sat opposite him and on a table by his side was an open box of bon bous the records and observations which will prove my claim to discovery of the north tole will be submitted to the university of copenhagen before the end of the year he said when the university has passed upon them i shall submit duplicate copies simultaneously to all the geographical so cieties of the world it will doubtless take f_e~\iniversl!y at least a month to examine my records my eskimo guides will be brought here next summer tells about the pole what did the north pole look like queried an interviewer just a field of floating ice with no land or life of any sort in sight replied dr cook at times the ice appeared purple the tint depending on the position of the sun at dearborn station the train was board ed by mr dixon mr day and the other members of the reception committee in cluding j h batten a r gates charles j o'connor and h e otte no seienti'its or representatives of geograph ical societies appeared the committee es corted dr cook to an automobile where dr cook bowed in acknowledgment of the applause of the crowd as he boarded the automobile florence walton and blanche west of the old town com pany presented him with an engraved scroll bearing the signatures of the lead j ing theatrical people now playing here i the lobby of the congress hotel was filled with men and women when the explorer arrived and shouts of here's dr cook : _ . â€” , discoverer of the xorth pole r eady to leave the depot upon his arrival in Chicago and some of the welcoming citizens cartoonist igoe's idea of cook's appearance as a lecturer is given oelow in the picture reading from left to right are shown two actresses dr frederick a cook clyde l day mrs cook george w dixon and walter lonsdale dr murphy button stahts 25,000 suit woman cured by operation sues because contrivance meant to stay did stay for correctly performing an abdominal operation dr d n eisendrath is asked to pay 25,000 to his patient mrs vendela olson 1 ' it all hinges on a murphy sutton the little appliance which was invented by dr john b murphy of Chicago and is recognized by all authorities to have revo lutionized abdominal surgery is causing mrs olson and her lawyer l h saltiel more worry thau stitching the real article on a double row directoire would cause the attorney alone the button was used tn an operation on mrs olson and not removed just how she discovered that the button was not removed the flies in the damage suit which was entered in the superior court yesterday do not reveal however stay the button did and dr eisendrath admits it further he admits compound ing his offense by allowing the appliance to stay even after a second operation which became necessary button meant to stay perhaps mrs olson's nurse wished to while the weary hours of convalescence away with pleasant conversation so in formed her that dr eisendrath had not removed the button perhaps the doctor himself had told mrs olson in a burst of confidence that he had left the appliance * anyhow mrs olson still has the button and wants 23,000 for retaining possession the oniy argument against mrs olson's claim for 25,000 however is the asser tion by dr murphy himself and every other surgeon whoever did use the murphy but ton that it was meant to stay in fact it would be impossible to remove lhe but ton after it had been used to join two parts of a severed intestine this insignificant fact was overlooked by mrs olson and her attorney i\_e the suit was brought discovery to bring smiles the murphy button consists of two silver bulbs on a silver tube of about half an inch in diameter the ends of the severed intestine are drawn over the bulbs stitched together and the bulbs snapped together by a spring holding the stitched edges in place until complete healing of the wound takes place nature takes care of the but ton after the wonud is healed mrs olson's discovery that the wicked button is still with her will produce noth ing more than a smile among the profes sion according to dr eisendrath dr murphy in the meantime will go on cheerfully using his appliance wherever necessary oblivious to mrs olson's in dignation or mr saltiel's opinion of dr eisendrath's surgery lewis denies knox story Chicago _ n.vy.r in washington on legal business he says washington d c oct s colonel j hamilton lewis who arrived here to night from new york says that if secre tary knox as reported telegraphed hiin at Chicago to come to washington he did uot get the telegram as he left Chicago sev eral days ago speaking of the report that secretary knox wants to see him colonel lewis said that he is not informed as to that statement but that if knox wants to see him it is probably about some phase of the report which lewis made to the department after his tour of japan and east generally it is probable colonel lewis will call at the state depart ment it was legal business that called colonel lewis to new york and washing ton he says the uuÂ£d states supreme court will open on m____ly __â– _____ f new air marvel can rise to any height san francisco cal oct 8.-a flying ; machine that lifts itself vertically without any forward propulsion is the claim made for a new marvel of the air which will be tested ln the near future inventor w j english of gather station near fruitvale and his father peter english have spent a year in the construction of the machine they declare their invention ls the solu tion of the helicopter problem which has puzzled aeronauts in this country and france the machine which incorporates the helicopter principle at the starting of the motor and by means of its propellers will rise gracefully in the air to almost any al titude the englishes say by diverting the propellers from their horizontal or lifting position twenty-eight degrees a driving pow er of seventy-five miles an hour is attained the less number of degrees the propellers are diverted the more slowly the helicopter ls driven ahead the helicopter weighs 525 pounds and is built of steel tubing its wheel base is eight feet by four feet it carries a motor of seventy five horse power weighing mo pounds the helicopter has an estimated lifting capacity of over 1.000 pounds j.'w m'kinnon aids morse i lii.-.-i_oaii buys in steamship line for fremied financier bostox oct b by a foreclosure sale in boston the plan for reorganization of the metropolitan steamship company is prac tically assured and charles yv morse re mains in control of the line for 2,500,000 which is 59.000 less than the mortgage held by the american trust company the prop erty was bought in the interest of the re organization there was no competition president fessenden of the american trust company acted as auctioneer john vv mckinnon of Chicago made the only bid of j-.'.500.000 he charles w morse and george e shaw are the reorganization managers they will forr a corporation anoecarry out the plan â– ireland to get home rule if liberals win election by churchill jsame form of government as that of south africa is promised special cable to the examiner london oet b lf the liberal party wins the impending general election there is the strongest probability of ireland being granted home rule that a definite agreement to that effect has been con cluded between the leaders of the liberal and irish parties was evident from to-day's speeches winston churchill speaking at the na tional liberal club declared that the gov ernment would effect a national settle ment with ireland tlie same as we have made with south africa mr birrell speaking at bristol with sig nificant concurrence said the time must come when irish questions shall be relegated to ireland where they can be understood the outcome of the fight which the lib erals are waging against the lords on the budget is most important so far as ire land is concerned if the liberals win the truth of john redmond's assertion that the last obstacle to home rule has been removed will undoubtedly be shown as with the mandate of the people behind them the re-elected liberal party could jam through a home ruh_j|iu which ihe lords dare not vcy^____k mm _â– __ ___ statistics of the two great games cubs-sox pirates-tigers attendance 16,762 attendance 29,743 total receipts 11,683.75 total receipts 40,271.50 players'share 6,309.22 players share 21,746.61 each club's share 2,103.08 each club 7,248.87 national commission 1,168.37 national commission 4,027.15 cubs ano pirate victors 46,000 view openings of decisive baseball series by frank b mcquiston by hugh s fullerton overall well backed by west siders takes the great walsh into camp 4 to 0 chance's men clinching game in first inning on loose fielding of old foes peaceful pittsburg is kept awake by howling fans who parade in honor of the 4 to 1 defeat of detroit in the first world's championship contest the revelers block street car traffic pittsburg pa oct 8 one thousand joy-mad pittsburg ball bugs chanting through the corridors of the colonial annex hotel to-night was one of the features of an evening of terror to law-abiding citizens of pittsburg and this was the song they sang oh how do you like our wagner who is not unknown to fame maybe he hasn't ty cobb's wings but he gets there just the same when the mob would stop to take breath there could be heard stealing down tiÂ»c elevator shaft the pitiful whine of the tiger yes pittsburg met the detroit tiger l'or the world's baseball championship to-day and that tigers is pittsburg's over night at least incidentally hans wagner is a few laps ahead of ty cobb to-night in the fame marathon the score of the first battle for the world's champion ship was pittsburg 4 detroit 1 sit 3:55 p in when 29,743 fans poured out of forbes field it looked like a footrace from a deaf and dumb congress they had no more voice than so many rabbits they had lost their talk inside the grounds how ever later on their voices came back apparently one hundredfold and that's why other people in pittsburg are not sleeping to-night parades block street cars the city is mad street car traffic jwas interfered with downtown to-night ' by impromptu parades each of which i sooner or later brought up in front i of the colonial annex where the un | fortunate jennings and his band of ; american league champions have j sought refuge it is not aione that the champion jpittsburgs beat detroit to-day in the 1 opening round of the annual fight for the world's championship that causes the mad joy in pittsburg to-night but ! it is what the future holds or what itbe local fans think the future holds for did not jennings to-day present his strongest front with the prac tically unbeatable mullin in the box and did not pittsburg in opposition present adams admittedly its weakest pitcher and yet after one bad inning adams toyed with the champion tigers they could do noth ing with him on the other hand the further the pirates went with mullin the closer they got to him bet 1 to 2 pirates take 4 straight betting in pittsburg to-night is 2 to 1 on pittsburg for the champion ship and 1 to 2 that detroit does not win a game if to-day's play by the two teams may be used as a criterion then detroit never should win any game from pittsburg the fun began with the break of day when almost 3,000 persons were found huddled in the fog outside the ticket windows at forbes field some of them had been there more than twelve hours while almost all had been there more than six hours wait ing for the windows to open so they might pay 50 cents for the privilege of sitting on a hard seat ins'.ae the field to see pittsburg and detroit fight by 9 o'clock the crowd outside the windows had increased to 5,000 and then came the police 300 strong to o 1 ne batted ball one burst ol speed a quick hurried throw a frantic stab by a stiff-backed baseman and the first game ol the Chicago championsmp series had been thrown away by the white sox almost before it started and victory forced upon the willing even eager cubs that one play the first of a hard fought but hopeless game yielded two runs for the 1909 world's champions and enabled them to win without much effort 4 to 0 the four represents not the batting strength of the ct^ta against walsh but more the weak qe fense offered by tiie white sox to the fast and clever nttacks of their foe men and the big naught achieved by the white sox represents the effec tiveness of big orvie overall who pitching magnificently and withou waver or wabble curved the south siders into a state of aelpless sub mission only once did iliey really l threaten to score and that time a pitch out wrecked the sox hit and run plan sawed down a runner at thirrl and enabled overall to blank the foe 16.672 see-civil war start the opening of the intersectional struggle came under ideal circum stances and never was there a more perfect day a prettier crowd or more delightful surroundings for a ball game in a way however the crowd was disappointing for only 16,672 came filling th â€¢ reserved seats pact ing portions Â«>â€¢:,. , , md leavinij great gaps on dior scheme of humanity fart â€¢â– ns over flowed however _^ ' can ity surrounded the \ it was a diviiied . . geysers of applause b j the throng in snots r"-i tnv * well wild outburst â– ile wals mowing down the cubs with big fast breaking side arm spi all but trostly it was a solid volume of w.'si side rooting for the cubs were intreur92fe at home playing before the c.a&h up west siders while the north siofl the cribs and the uitlanders looked on impartially roar of applause greets cub 1 !.. there was a terrific roar from the crowd already assembled when short ly after 1 o'clock chance led his vet eran warriors down the field to start the campaign to recover the cham pionship of Chicago which was lost to the sox three years ago it was a grim and battle-scarred aggregation quiet and businesslike and they start ed practicing as if post-season serie were all in the day's work a few moments later there was â– roar from the crowd struggling arounob the entrances as sullivan and hl blue-garbed team arrived and a mo i ment later the men who had foughi against hope all through the american league season trotted down the field their partisans giving them a wild greeting and the shrill war yelp of th south side make-a-hit make-a-hiiw make-a-hit went up from all pares ofl the field 1 the cubs batted and as the sol * came on for their batting practice th south side cry rose again defying th west side for threejarters of an hour while hit a crowd stiu^bcinbled and massed tr - l f_fl continued en 3d page 1st column continued on 4th page 2nd column t sntinued kon 4th page 3rd column jp weather forecast j jy>a Chicago and vicinity â€” partly f j jt 1 y cloudy saturday and sunday with fcj \ â– *Â« probably showers cooler moderate j-/3 " mj variable winds ji-ji fl yes read the seore fll '& but don't overlook r \ l the want ads jg